main navigation bar - top row

A Performing-Arts School Within a Major University

The University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance educates the artists, scholars, educators and entrepreneurs of the future.
Students are prepared with expert skills, instilled with passionate enthusiasm, and emboldened to challenge and inspire the world through the
power of the performing arts.

Bachelor of Theatre Arts: Set Your Sights on Tomorrow

What is the Bachelor of Theatre Arts curriculum?

This degree program is for students who wish a well-rounded, substantive theatre education within the framework of a solid liberal arts education. The BTA is not a performance program. It is designed for students who want to pursue careers in areas such as production management, arts administration, dramaturgy, or teaching.

BTA students take a core of theatre courses that includes introductory acting, design, directing, theatre history, technical theatre, stage management and American drama. You'll also take a significant number of elective courses from a broad range of theatre offerings such as Theatre Forum, Acting and the Black Experience, Playwriting, History of Dress, History of Decor and Performing Arts Administration. In addition, you may take cognate courses in English, film and video studies, music, and social studies or humanities.

The BTA provides flexibility for students who are interested in developing a minor area of study. In consultation with your program advisor, you may customize your programs to fit your personal academic or career goals. Students with serious interest in a second field of study may earn a dual degree, both of which usually can be completed within five years. A total of 120 credit hours is required for the BTA degree.

BTA alumni have found work in a variety of exciting places such as Mosaic Theatre, The Arena Stage, Second City, City Year, Teach for America, NBC Casting, Playwrights Horizons, and various casting and booking agencies in New York. A high percentage have gone on to graduate study in areas such as theatre history and criticism, law, education, arts administration, social work, and literature. In addition to working in acting directing, teach, arts administration, and stage management, BTAs have also pursued careers in musical direction, conducting, and choreography.

How are Bachelor of Theatre Arts students involved with productions?

BTA majors receive course credit for working in production shops (costume, scenery, paint, props, electrics, sound) and for assisting the stage managers or arts management staff with the various theatre, musical theatre, opera and dance productions offered by the U-M School of Music, Theatre & Dance.

Studio performances and staged readings:

Playwriting classes present their works-in-progress to the public at the end of the year. A number of BTA majors participate as writers and/or readers.

main navigation bar - top row

A Performing-Arts School Within a Major University

The University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance educates the artists, scholars, educators and entrepreneurs of the future.
Students are prepared with expert skills, instilled with passionate enthusiasm, and emboldened to challenge and inspire the world through the
power of the performing arts.